On Sunday morning, Edward Snowden boarded an Aeroflot flight in Hong Kong, landing in Moscow more…
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To wit: Austria, Finland, India, Ireland, Norway, Poland, and Spain have all denied Snowden's application, most on the grounds than an applicant must be on their soil before he or she can be granted asylum status. (India appeared to give a blanket "no.")

Russia will never hand NSA leaker Edward Snowden over to the U.S., Russian President Vladimir Putin …
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Snowden's next destination will therefore likely come from one of the remaining 12 countries from which he's sought asylum: Bolivia, Brazil, China, Cuba, France, Germany, Iceland, Italy, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, Switzerland or Venezuela.

Of these, only Venezuela has made any kind of comment—and of these, only Venezuela's head of state is currently in Russia.

"We think this young person has done something very important for humanity," President Nicolas Maduro told reporters yesterday, saying that the country would consider Snowden's asylum request, but refused to comment on whether he'd take Snowden back to Caracas with him in his presidential jet.

Of course, there's one more possibly next destination for Snowden: The U.S.